Naty1 said:
Is your interpretation now different than Zappers:
...there's nothing to prevent anyone from knowing both the position and momentum of a particle in a single mesurement...
My interpretation of the uncertainty relations is the same as his. I do however disagree with the specific words quoted above. His argument is the same as the one in Ballentine's article, so I guess we have a different interpretation of the single slit experiment described there. After the discussion with Demystifier, I came to the conclusion that what happens in Ballentine's thought experiment isn't a momentum measurement. It has nothing to do with the fact that momentum is "inferred" rather than "directly measured". It's just that the results won't be distributed as described by the restriction of the function ##\vec p\mapsto|\langle\vec p,\psi\rangle|^2## to the y axis. This means that a theory that says that this
is a momentum measurement is significantly worse at making predictions about results of experiments than one that says that this is
not a momentum measurement.
I do however agree with ZZ's main point (and probably everything in that blog post except the words quoted above), which is that the uncertainty theorem is about the statistical distribution of the results of future measurements. The theorem doesn't say anything about whether you can measure both at the same time. That is a separate issue. (I believe you
can't measure both at the same time, but I haven't seen a proof of that). What it actually says is that you can't
prepare a state that has both a sharply defined position and a sharply defined momentum. I mentioned this in #5:
Fredrik said:
What we can't do is to prepare a state such that we would be able to make an accurate prediction about what the result of a position measurement would be, and an accurate prediction about what the result of a momentum measurement would be.
Naty1 said:
I take it you are not making any distinction between a single simultaneous measurement of a system versus repeated measurements of identically prepared ystems?
I am. I don't consider a series of measurements to be a single measurement. This quote from another thread explains what I mean:
Fredrik said:
If you run this experiment over and over on electrons that were all prepared in the same spin state, then you can figure out how the first pair of magnets were aligned. This isn't what one would normally consider a "measurement" in QM. A measurement is an interaction between the system and the measuring device that puts a component of the measuring device, that I'll call "the indicator component" here, into one of many possible final states labeled by numbers. The indicator component must appear as a classical object to a human observer, and its possible final states must be distinguishable. Otherwise, it wouldn't be of any use as an indicator. The number corresponding to the final state is considered the "result" of the measurement.
Naty1 said:
Here are some statements which seem to me supportive of Zapper's. But these are hardly "crystal clear".
Alber Messiah, Quantum Mechanics, Two Volumes in One, 1999, page 135
I'm a bit puzzled by what Messiah said, because he starts out saying roughly that there's no function that has a constant absolute value and is very sharply peaked (duh), and then the words "they both can be measured at a given time t" appear out of nowhere. Maybe he just meant that
either of them can be measured, not that a joint measurement is possible.
Naty1 said:
Not sure what part of his quote you find interesting. If it's the "cannot know the position and momentum of a particle" part, this is just his way of saying what I said about state preparation above.
Naty1 said:
This too is roughly what I said about state preparation above, plus the fact that a non-destructive position measurement
is a state preparation that localizes the particle in the sense that it makes its wavefunction sharply peaked. This of course "flattens" its Fourier transform, so if the Fourier transform was sharply peaked before the position measurement, it isn't anymore.